The Brussels Post, 1898-8-5, Page 7AUGUST 15,1898 TIS] BRUSSELS POST,
7
KINGLY ROBES OF CHRIST.
DR. TALMAGE PREACHES ON THE
SWEETNESS OL' JESUS,
Cats Robes Were Odorous With Myrrh, and
Aloes, and cassia—'rite Pigmies °OOlden
Tires and the Places or Heaven—How
Ilnr Erllu,ds Appear to Their Ire eistlal
Rorie—An Appeal roe 'chose Left os.
Earth..
A despatch from Washington says: --
'Rev, Dr. Talmage preached from the
following text: "All thy garments
smell of myrrh, and aloes, and cape's,
out of the ivory palaces,"—lesalms xlv.
,$,
Among the grand a.dornmonts or the
city of :Paris is the church of Norte
Dame, with its great towers, and ela-
borate rose -window, and sculpturing of
Lhe last judgment, with the trumpet-
ing angels and rising dead; its battle-
ments of quatrefoil; its sacristy, 'with
ribbed ceiling and statues of saints.
But there was nothing In all that 'mill-
ing which more vividly appealed to my
plain tastes than the costly vestments
which laid in oaken presses, robes that
bad been embroidered with gold and
been worn by popes and archbishops
on great occasions. There eves a robe
in which fins VCT, had appeared at. the
crowning of the first Napoleon. There
was also a vestment that had been
worn at the baptism of Napoleon II,
As our guide opened the oaken presses
t
and brought out these vestments of
fn.bulous cost, and lifted them up, the
fragrance of the pungent aromatics in
which they had been preserved filled
the place with a sweetness that was
almost oppressive. Nothing that had
been done in stone more vividly im-
pressed me than these things that had
been done in cloth, and• embroidery,
and per1u ne.
But now, my friends, I open the
,drawer of this text, and I look upon
the kingly robes of Christ; and as I
lift them flashing with eternal jewels,
the whole bouse is filled with the
aroma of these -garments, which "smell.
of myrrh, and aloes, and cassia, out of
the ivory palaces!'
In my text the Ring steps forth ;
His robes rustle and blaze as He ad-
vances. His pomp, and power, and
glory overmaster the spoatator. More
brilliant is He than Queen Vashti mov-
ing amid the Persian princess; than
Marie Antoinette on the day when
Louis .a:V.L. put upon her the necklace
of eight hundred gems; than Anne
Boleyn the day when henry VIII. wel-
comed her to his palace. A.11 beauty
and all pomp forgotten, while we stand
in the presence of this imperial glory.
Ring of Zion. Ring of earth. Jiang
of heaven. Ring for ever! His gar-
ments not worn out, not dust bedrag-
gled, but radiant, and jewelled, and
redolent. It eeeuns as it they must
have been pressed a hundred years
amid the flowers of heaven. The
wardrobes from which they have been
taken must have been sweet with clus-
ters of camphor and frankincense, and
all manner of precious wood. Do you
not inhale the odours? dye, aye,
:They "smell of myrrh, and aloes, and
cassia, out of the ivory palaces."
Your first curiosity Lu -night is to
know why the robes of Christ are odor-
ous with myrrh. This was a bright -
lea fed. Abyssinian plant. It was tri-
foliated. The Greeks, Egyptians, R.o-
muns, and Jews bought and sold it at
a blebprice. The first present, that
was ever given to Christ was ne sprig
of myrrh, thrown on Itis infantile bed
in Bethlehem; and the last that
Christ ever had was Myrrh pressed in-
to t.hecup of His crucifixion. The na-
tives would Lake a stone and bruise the
tree, and then there would exude a
gran that would saturate all the
used
e
Thie
ground beneath.gum was
for piu'pos°s of merchandise. One
piece of it, no longer than ne chestnut,
would whelm a whole room with od-
ours. It was put in closets, in chests,
in drawers, in rooms, and its perfume
adhered almost interminably to any-
thing that was anywhere near it. So,
when in my text 1 read •that Christ's
garments smell of myrrh, I immedi-
ately conclude the exquisite sweetness
et Jesus. 1 know that to Many He is
only likes any histor'ieal person. An
ether John Howard. Another Fred-
erick Oberland. Another Confunius. A
Grand subject for a painting. ta. her-
oic theme for a poem, A beautiful,
form for a statue. But to those who
have heard His voice, ani felt Hie par-
don, and received His benediction, He
is mushy, and light, and warmth, and
thrill, and eternal fragrance. Sweet
as a ft'iend sticking to yea when all
else betray. Lifting emit up while
others try to push you down. Not so
much like morning-glories, that bloom
only when the sun is coming up, nor
like "feat•-o'clocks," that bloom only
when the sun is going down ; but like
myrrh, perpetually aromatic; the
same morning, moon, and night, yes-
ierclay, Lo -day, for ever. It seems as
1 we cannot wear lfkm out, We put
on Him all our burdens, and afflict.
Rim with all our griefs, and set Him
foremost in all our battles, and yet
He is ready L0 rut, and to sympathize,
end in help. We have so imposed up -
millers, that one would think in etern-
el affront He w•ouLU quit our soul..;
ind yet to -night He addresses us with
the seine tenderness, dawns open us
with the same sinile, pities us with
the same compassion. Thera is
no name like His for us. It
Is ,more imperial Qom Caesar's,
more musical than IDeothoven's, mere
conquering than Ch n 'temagne's, more
eloquent than (.`icertee, It throbs with.
all life. It weeps with all pathos. IL
greens with ail pain, 11 stoops with
all condeiccnsinn. It brenLiles with fall
pe.fulne, Who like Jesus toset a
broken l ,ne, to pity a houaeless orph-
an,. to nurse n, stat man, to take a
prodigal back without: anyscolding, to
illumine a eernetoryalt peughed'vitt.
osavor to make a queen unto (Joel out
f the lost woman of the street, to
c.ntnilt the tears of lumen sorrow in o
leehrymal that shall never he bn'nleen,?
.Wien bee sloth an eye to see tote need,
Seat a Hp to kiss away our sorrow, much
a hand to snatch us out of the taw,
such a 'foot to trample OUT enemies,
such a heart 1.o embrace all aur neeesel-
time J. struggle for eome metaphor
with which to express slim. Iles is not
like the busting forth of a full arches-
tre; that is Loo loud, Ile is 1101 like
the sea when !tithed, to rage by the tem-
pest; that is too Uotsterous. Be is
not. like the mountain, its brow wneath-
eti with the lightnings; that is too
solitary. Alive us a Holter• type, a gen-
tler eompuaison. We have seemed Le
see Hine with our eyes, and to hear Bina
with our mere, and to touch .Ulan with
Liar hands. Oh, that to -night ]le might
appear to some other one of our five
amides. Aye, the nostril. shall discover
Itis presence. Ile comes upon us like
spice gales from heaven. Yea, Itis
garments smell of pungent, lasting,
and all pervasive myrrh.
Oh that you knew all I -lie sweetness)
How 800n you word(, turn from your
revels. 1f Lhe philosopher leaped out
oI his bath in it lyeuzy of joy, and oitset-
ped. Itis hands and rusbed through the
streets because, he hall found Lhe solu-
tion of a rna'Lliematical problem, hose
will you feel, leaping from the foun-
Luin n,t: a Saviour's meteor n,ntt pardon,
melted clean und,made white ae snow,'
when the question has been solved i
"How can my soul, be saved?" Naked,
frost-bitten, etarm-lashed soul, let ,le. -
sus this night throw around Lhee the
"garments that. smell of myrrh, and
aloes, and cassias, out of the ivory
Imlaees."
Your second curiosity is to know why
the robes of Jesus acre odorous with.
aloes. There is some dilferenue of op-
inion about where these aloes grew,
whist is the color of the flower, what
is the partioulcue appearance of the
herb. :Suffice it for you udrd me L0
know Lhat aloes means bitterness all
the evorld over; and when Christ
Domes with garments beering that par-
ticular odor, they suggest to me the
bitterness of u Saviour's suffering.
Were there ever such nights as Jesus
lived through—nights on the moun-
tain, nights on the sea, nights in Lhe
desert? Who ever had such a hard re-
ception 0,8 Jesus had? A ,hostelry
the first, ant unjust brial in oyer, and
terminer another, a foul-mouthed, yell-
ing mob the hast.. Was there a space
on His back as wide us your two fin -
gees where He was not whipped? Was
there a ,'.pane 101 His brow an inch
hkluane where He was ndt out by the
leviers? Whets the spike struck at the
instep, did it not go clear through to
the hallow of the foot? Ob, long,
deep, hitter pilgrimage! Aloes' aloes!
John leaned his head on Christ; but
who did Chiiet lean en? five thou-
sand men fmdl by the Saviour ; who fed
Teens? '1'he sympathy of a S'aviour's
heart going out to the leper and, the
ackulteress; but who soothed Christ?
Denied both cradle and death -bed. Ile
'had a fit place neither to be born- nor
to die. A poor babe, a poor lad, n. poor
young Mian 1 Not so much as a taper
to cheer tris dying hours ; even the
candle of the sun snuffed out. Oh,
was it not all aloes? Our sins, sorrows,
bereavements, losses, and all the agon-
ies of earth and hell picked up as in
ono cluster and, squeezed into one oup,
and that pressed to Ilia lip until the
acrid, nauseating, bitter draught was
swallowed with a distorted counten-
ance and a shudder. from head to foot,
and u gurgling strangutalion. Aloes!
aloes! Nothing but aloes I
All this for Himself? Alt this to
get the fame in the world of being a
martyr ? All this in a spirit of stub-
bornness because Ile did not like
Augustus? No, uo. All this because
He wanted to plunk you and me from
hell. IBeoause He wanted to raise you
and me to heaven. IBecanse we were
last, and He wanted us found. !Because
we wore blind, and He wanted us to
see. (Because we were serfs, and He
wanted us manumitted. Ole ye in
release oup of life the saccharine has
predominated; uh ye who have had
bright and spackling beverages, Trow do
you feet towards Him who in your
stead, and to purchase youa' disenthrusl
mous, took the atoes, the unsavoury
aloes, the bitter aloes?
Your third curiosity is to know. why
these garments of Christ are odor-
ous with cassia. This was a plant Unit
grew in India and the adjoining is-
lands. You do not care to hear what
kind of a flower it had or whati kind
of a stalk. It is enough for aceto tell
you that it was
Lmedicinally.. In
as Lisad that land, and that age,where they
knew but little about phlu'mrmy, cas-
sia was used to arrest many; forms of
disease. So when. in my text we fend
Christ coming with garments that
smell of cassia, it suggests to mel the
heating and curative power of thn'Son
of God, "Oh," you say, "now you, have
a superflaaus idea. We are not sick.
Why do we want, cassia? We are Oh -
retic. Our respiration is perfect. Our
limbs are lithe, and in these summer
days Wm feel We could bound lilts
the roe." I beg to differ, my broth-
er, from you. None of you can be in
better physical health than I am, and
yet: I .mush say we are all sick. Them
taken the diagnosis of your case, anci
have examined, all the best authorities
on the subject, and I carate now to tell
you. that you are full of wounds, and
bruises, and petrifying sores, which
have not been bound up or mnllilLed
with ointment. The mara:srnus of sin
is on us—Lhe palsy, the dropsy, the
leprosy. The man that is expiring
Lo -night, Lhe allopathic and homoeo-
pathic doctors having .given him up,
and his friends now standing around
to take this last words, ill no more cer-
tainly dying as to his body than you
and 1 are dying, noks we have Luk-
en medicine from Clod's apat.hlecary,
All the leaves of this Bible are only
SO many prescriptions frmn the Divine
Physician, written, not in Latin, like
the prescriptions or earthly physici-
ans, but written in plain English', so
that a man, though a fo el, nems not
Orr therein, 'I'h:suk Gal 'that the Sn-'
vkour's garments smell of cassia. If
you have not taken this heating medi-
cine of the Gospel, you are dying a,
death w-hiell will not., i.erha,ps, put your
body into the cemetery just now, :but'
you are (lying a death which will leave
the soot in a grave whose bendsdone
is inser•Lbesl with this epitaph: "In
Memoriam: Vere lies a man seem miss-
ed heaven. This is the second death,
Born .venie years ego on earth; 110(1
est ui4rIli, in eternity."
'.l.'here is a death whose pees
OuLlasts the fleeting breath,
Ole, what eternal horrors hang
Ai.tl
• d the seem] Sea !
Around
Suppose a mall wain sick, and there
Wes it phial on his mantel -piece evil h
medicine. he knew would mere him, and
he refused. to take it. What wouhl
you say of him? lie is a suicide. And
what tin you say or that man who to-
night, siek in mu, Iles the healing Me-
dicine of God's grain ahead bite and
refuses lel take it? 11 he dies heis a
enio]de. Petiole talk as theuyli God
Look a mune and led him out lee. dark-
ness anci deal, 1; as though Ile brought
Min up L Mlle Witte and then pushed
Min off. Oh, no. When u nsium is lust
IL i,j not becattae. God punted hien off ;
it; is because he jumps off. In olden
times a ,lli•IrIn waN bnrlHl at Itis c
eme-
roadsand the reaple were eccustamed
to throw' stones upon his grave, So it
seems to mm there may be in this
Melee tn-nighd u man seise is destroy-
ing hie ower soul, and as though tiro
angels of God were here to bury him
,rt Ilhe point where the roasts of life
aril death cross each other, throwing
upon the grave the broken law and
a great pile of misineprove.d privileges,
so that those going by may look at
the fearful mount and learn what a
suicide it i8 when an immortal soul,
for which Jesus died, puts itself out of
the way.
When Christ, trod tots planet with
tout of flesh, the people rushed after
Him—rreeple who were sick, and those
seem, being so sick they ovoid not walk,
were bronaht by them Friends. Here 1
see amolher holding up alittle child,
and saying: "Cure this croup, Lord
Jesus. Cure this scarlet fever." And
others saying: "Cure this ophlhat-
inia, 'Give ease and rest to this" spinal
distress. Siratehten this club foot."
Christ made every houses where He
stopped adispensary. 1 do not believe
that in the nineteen centuries that
have gond by since then. 11is beast has
gat hard. I teal that we Can come to-
night, with all our wounds of soul,
nodget his benediction, Oh Jesus, here
we are, We want healing. We want
sight. We want health. We want life.
The whole need not a physician, but
they that are sink. Blessed. be God that
Jesus Christ comes through this cis-
semblage now, His " garments smell-
ing of ntyre•h"—that means fragrance
—"and aloes 't—they mean hitter sac-
rilieial memories—" and cassia "—that
means medicine and cure; and accord-
ing to my text, He comae "out of the
ivory palaces."
Yon know, or 1C you do not know
1 will tell you. new, that some of the
palaces of olden times were adorned
with ivory. Ahab and Solomon had
their homes furnished with it. The
tusks of African and Asiatic elephants
were twisted into all manner of shapes,
and Lbere were stairs of leery and.
chairs of ivory, and tables o£ ivory,
and floors of ivory, and pillars of ivory
and windows of ivory, and fountains
that dropped into basins of ivory, and
rooms that had ceilings of ivory. Oh,
white and overmastering beauty.
Green tree brunches sweeping the
white curbs. Tapestry trailing the
snowy floors. Brackets of'light flashing
on the lustrous surroundings. Silvery
music rippling to tate heath of the ar-
chse. The mere thnugbt of it almost
stuns my brain, and you say: " Oh,
if I could only have walked over such
floors! If 1 could have thrown my-
self in such a chair I If 'I could have
heard. the drip Emil 'dash of those foun-
tains!" You shall have something bet-
ter than that if you only let Christ in-
troduce you. From that place He came,
and to that place. He pswposes to trans-
port you ; for His "garments smell of
myrrh, andaloes, and eas,sia, out of
ivory palaces."
Oh, what a plaoe heaven must be I
The Tuilleries of the French, the Wind-
sor Castle of the English, the Span-
ish Alhambra., the Russian Kremlin,
are dungeons compared with it. Not
so teeny castles on either side of the
Rhine as are ivory palaces on both
sides of the river of God. One for the
angels, insufferably bright, winged,
fired -eyed, tempest-charioted. One for
the martyrs, with blood -red robes from
under the altar. One for the Ring,
the steps of His palace the crowns of
the Cbureh Militant. One for the sing-
ers who Meets the one hundred and
forty and four thousand. One for you,
ransomed from an. One for me, pluck-
ed from the burnings. Ob, the ivory
palaces!.
To -night it seems to me as if the
windows of ,those Iyalaees were illum-
ined for some great victory, and I1ook
in and see climbing the stairs of ivory
and walking the floors of ivory, and
looking from the windows of ivory,
soma whomloved on
eve knew and o 0
earth. Yes, I know them. Thera Etre
father and mother, not eighty-two
years, and seventy-nine years, as when
they ]eft us, but blithe and young as
on their marriage day, And there are
brothers and sisters merrier than
when we used to ramp across the, mea -
doe's together. The cough gone. The
cancer oared. The erysipelas healed.
1'113 heart -break over. Oh, how fair
they are in tlra ivory palaces I And
your dear little children that went
out from you; Christ did not let one
of them strop as He .lifted them, He
did not wrench them from you, No;
they went as from one they loved well
to One whom they loved better. TT 1
should take your little child and press
its soft face against my rough cheek,
l' might keep 11. '1. tittle while; but
when you, the mother, came along, it
woaalid str'u'ggle to go with you, And
so you sat holding your dying child
when Jesus passed by in the room,
and the little one. sprang cut 10 greet
Htm, That is all, Your Christ ion dead
end not go down into the dust, and
the 'pewee anci the rnud. Though it
rained all that funeral day, and the
water came up to the wheel's hub, as
you drove one to the cemetery, Itmade
no difference to them, for they step-
ped from the home here to the home
there, right: into Lime ivory palaces. All
is well with them, All is well.
When T p'nss thinking out this ser-
mon, and hail got to about this point,
there was a knock al; my door, and I
received a telegram from a very dear
ministerial friend. It rend: "My wife
just die.sl Funeral next Tuesday. Will
you he one of the ball -bearers?" .f
telegraphed immediately: "I will,"
Who could held busk ah.t such e, time?
•.1 lcno'sv 1 eovld emsa'ry my part of the
burden. It is not a dead weight: you
lift when you carry a Chris-
tian out. Teens mattes the lied up
soft with velvet promises, and He says;
"I'ut laese dawn here very gently. Put
that head, which will never arta
again,. an this poilow of hallmlujalis,
Send up word tbat the procession is
coming, Ring the polis. Ring! Open
your gates, ye ivory palaces' And
our loved. d. a s there. They
ones arts
y
aregiust toy eertttbmly therm, having died
in Christ. as that you are here. There
is telly ane Thing more they want. In-
deed, there Is trio thing' in heaven they
have not got, They want it, What is
lee Your company,.But oh, my bro-
ther, unless you change your facts you
cannot rearb that harbour. You might
es well lake the Baltimore and Olio
railroad, expecting in that di melon to
reueb Toronto. us to go in the way
scene of you are going. and yet expect
to reach the ivory enslaves. Your loved
015854 are looking out of the windows
Of Leaved tee -night„ and yet you seem
to turn your hack upon them, You do
c
not seem tic know the wend rf their
voices es well as you used t0, or bye
moved by the sight. of their deur faces,
Call louder, ye departed ones I Call
louder from the ivory plains!
Wben I think of that plats and think
of my entering it, 1 feel awkward; 1
feel as sometimes when 1 have been
exposed La the weather, and my oboes
have been bemired, and my epee is
soiled, and my hair dismhevelled, and 1
stop in area of some fine resldenee
where T have an errand; 1 feel not fit
to go iu as 1 arts, Rnd oil among pol-
ished guests. Su some of us feel about.
heaven. We need to be washed, we
need to be rehabilitated before we go
into the ivory palaces, Eternal God,
let the surges of ally pardoning mercy
roll over 0s1 I want not only to waste
my hands and my feet, but, like some
skilful diver standing on the pier -head,
who leaps into the wave and comes up
ala far distant point from where he
went in, sot want to go down, and so I
want to come up, 0 Jesus, wash me
in the waves of Thy salvation?
And here I oak you to eWlvn amy-
stery that 10e been oppressing me for
twenty-five years. I have asked it of
(looters of divinity w -ho have been
studying; theology half acentury, and
they have given me no satisfactory
answer. I have turned over all the
hooks to my library, but got no win -
lion to the 'question, and to -night I
come and ask you for an explanation.
By what logic was Christ induced to
exchange the ivory palaces of heaven
for the crucifixion agonies of earth? I
shalltake the first thousand million
years in heaven to study out that
problem. ➢4etenwhile and now, taking
it as the tenderest and mightest of all
facts that Christ did, come; that He
came with spikes in. His feet, came with
thorns in His brow, came with spears
in His heart, to save you and me, "God
so loved the world that He gave 1I1is
only begotten Son. that whosoever be-
lieveth in 'flim should not perish but
have everlasting life." 0 Christ I
whelm this audience with Thy compass-
ion! Mow 111ni down like summer
grain with I:be harvesting sieltle of
Thy grace! Ride through, to -night,
the rongoerm', "'fhy garments smell-
ing of myrrh, and aloes, and cassia, out
of the ivory palaces."
NEARLY DISCOURAGED.
he Experience of dfr. Ralph Giberson
Who Suffered Greatly 100111 General
Debtllty.
$root the Advertiser, Hartland, N.B.
Ralph Giberson, postmaster at Mon -
quart, Carleton Co., N. B., is also
known as a prosperous agriculturist
and an enthusiast in his line. Now
stalwart and rugged, weighing 250
pounds, be scarce would be recognized
as the man who six months ago was
the picture of one suffering the terrible
symptoms of general debility. Hewes
run dawn in health, suffered much
Crone dizziness, almost blindness, gen-
eral dullness and depression of spirits.
He had a poor appetite and such food
as he ate gave him great distress
He was incapacitated for the 'w'ork that
fell upon him andwas well nigh utter-
ly discouraged. The symptoms
bordered on to those by which
hypochondria is manifested. Through
reading the Advertiser he learn-
ed of the particular benefit that
several of bis friends in ibis vicinity
had received by the use of Dr, Wil-
liams' Pink Pills, and by the hope
held out by their testimonials lee se-
cu'red a supply and took them accord-
ing to directions. The result. was al -
mast magical;; immediately his symp-
toms began t obeeome .less disagree-
able, and be steadily gained until now
he is perfectly free from' his( old! trou-
bles. He gladly and freely gives this
testimonial, that alt who may read it
may know the remedy if ever they
are troubled with general debility,
Dr.
iiItsns' Pink
Pills aura hy
disease. going to! I.hH root of the q seas They
renew and butte up the blood, and
strengthen the nerves, thus driving
discos° from the system. The genuine
can only be had in boxes, -1 he wrapper
around which bears the full trade
mark, "Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for
Pale People."
TO PREVENT an ATN HEATING IN
BIN.
Take two pieces of lour -inch plank
long enough to extend above the wheat
and two more 0 in wide and the same
length, writes ' W. J. Smith, Nail to-
gether so as to make at long tube open
at each end. Stave out of two sides,
0 in. from, bottom, a piece 1 ft, long
and nail over this section a fine wire
swooning. Set this on the floor, of the
bin, ono to every 8 fa square, and let
Le extend above the top of the grain.
Then cut through the lining of bin
every 14 ft„ ands near the floor holes
4 or 5 in, selulu'e, Over these nail
some of the same kind of wire scann-
ing, and the granary 15 ready to be
filled. I have been following this plan
for 15 years and never had any hot
grain, although I thresh from the
shock, and some( Imes too suet to grind.
Whenever the fair in the tubes gets the
least bit warm it rises to the top and
this forming a vacuum, cold. sir Desert
the outside, rushes in and there is,al-
ways a current of air 'sassing through
the grain.
PAINFULLY NEAT.
They tell me your Wife is a'tea'tiou-
larly fine housekeeper,
Excruciatingly so, I've Been that we -
man sprinkle the clock with Insect pow-
der to get rid of the tiolte.
You Cern
Get Tired
13y working bard, and then you can
get rested again. But If you ars tired
all the time it =wane that your blood
is poor. You need to Lake hood's Sar-
saparilla, tbs greet rsure for that tired
feeling because it 1s the great enrich-
er and vitalizer of the blood. You will
find appetite, nerve, mental and die
geative strength in
Hood's Sarsaparilla
Oeuada's Greatest Medicine,
Hood's Mille cure nausea, lodigeatton. 20o,
INTERCHANGEABLE.
Where in thunder are all my collars?
Why, I'm wearing one and sister has
another; Birdie took another and the
rest are at the laundry,
But I'll awear there was a clean one
in the drawer this noon,
Yes; Bridget borrowed that.
CONDITIONS NOT AX-CEPTBD.
Livesby Labornit — Madame, necee-
site, compels me ter ax yer fer some-
tbin' ter eat.
Mrs. Punly—Ax the wood pile first.
ill Temper
Is more rapidly improved by relief
frons physical suffering than in any
other way. Step an your friend's corn
and the impulse to strike is strong-
est. Putnam's Painless Corn Extractor,
by quickly and painlessly removing
them, insures good nature. Fifty imi-
tation proves its value. Beware of sub -
tit t.
s u es. "Pulnnm's " sure,sofa ,min-
., pain -
less. r
A whole town of 500 inhabiter is near
Foo -Chow has adopted Christiaiity.
'4)4045p
til ,
- ,cn
PERHAPS THAT WAS IT,
Mamma—Alice, what happened lest
evening? I thought I heard something
drop in the parlor.
Alice—I—I think Mr. Templeton fell
in love with me.
TO CURE A COLD IN ONE DAY.
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All Drug.
CUM refund the money if it fails to Cure. 250.
THE MONEY SAFE.
Needy Client—Oh, If I lose my case,
I don't see how you, are to be, paid.
Lawyer—Oh, don't worry about that,
my dear sir. The lawyer on the other
side is my partner.
Beware of Ointments for Catarrh
that contain Mercury.
as mercury will surely destroy the sense of
smell and completely doraage the whole sye.
tem when entering It through the mucous sun
fa.•ee. Such articles should never be used ex-
cept on prescriptions from reputable phynio-
lane, as the damage they will do is ten fold to
the Hood you can possibly derive from them.
Haile Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J.
Cheney & Cm. Toledo,O., contains no mercury
end is taken internally aoting directly upon the
blood and mucous surfaces of the system. In
buying Hall's Catarrh. Cure be sure you get
the genuine. Itis taken internally and made
in Toledo, Ohio. by If. J. Cheney & Co. Teats.
menial: free.
Sold by Daum; lets, .pilot; 76o. per bottle.
Hall's Family Pills are the beat.
PAINT so CHEAPYoih can use It on old
shingle roofs or sides of
buildings.—Used 22 years. With a good sprayer you can
igrt nsabrn ian oaepPaundiuogTuesstfw0iodPlnead•
Eve k Point Company, 670 Quea West,
Toronto,
TORONTO CUTTING SCHOOL offers special
Inducements to young men desirous 00
taking up Dottingg, pull partioularn on appli
cation. 113 YIJNGE ST., TORONTO.
R O 0 F I N O and Sheet Metal Works.
ed or Green. SLA'5E IILAOIi5BOARDB SLATE,
Black,p1,1
MPb,iy and Higb Oohaols. Tornow). Ronne Felt, Plteh,
Tor, sic, 110013NG TA,H (rOre New Oicy Bm,ild.
('00, - Teo . 1mttans by nirn,dotor fiwok 0Cmiln, oraa
atertnls ahlppesi to nes ppart of the country, Phonel938
1.5015105,80538, Adc`alde &Widmer etc„Toronto.
.1. N. 811001100N, M.D., N0, a Congo -M.
TORONTO, Ont.
Ey
E,
THROAT
�
EAII
9 pp4y
a0
8 Ei41Y71bTWlyCh g►^r'6.'6,1 SPEC1
THE TRIUMPH.
ADJUSTABLE STOVEPIPES.
YEn. 1011 Up anti taken down. Ono
beclaimed, nested, sad pet away In
a small space. Ask your floaters for
them. tlanufnotored by
G. B. BARCLAY,
]t+'= i68 Adelaide 5t. W.. Toronto.
seamen.
0500 :n.
aWf,a
till (: CL.
t t
e 1
Rs
Only Institution of a In Caneda for the euro o4
veno onto, 1f epee h defeat. E145. 0hod
In alL8'S , 1800. Ouse INSTITUTE, ed.
CHUE 9 P mbreke 00E INaTIoU000
0 Pembroke 5t., Toronto Oanndn.
every family-44ar
TAP. st ty .7051 MUT I8 NEED.
E O In ot
dasstoole, neatly packed id
wooden box, for repairing
boots, rubber,, harness and
tinware. All theoetoole are
full sized and practical, not
mere toys. Pull dirootlnna
accompany ea011 nntdt. A
great money sslor. Hun-
dreds of thoueanda now in
nee DelnYered free within
n radius of 101 stiles of
Montreal. Pr10e62,71, gond
nerd for prima of our sew.
Ins machines, wird mills,
rumps, sone, hardware.
wat0 oe, c.
+�
ThStPeter St,rMo tneol,
it •Ci
F
rSalem.
Iron Turning Lathe, sixteen inch swung,
six foot bed, rod and gear full, counter-
shaft complete, good as now, VERY
CHEAP. Apply,
The WILSON PUBLISHING 00.3
LIMITED,
73 to Al Adelaide St. W., Toronto.
1'
Quality y is the first thing to consider in buying J'ca,
Ll,..,.
0'
�;dd 4Rrtts
Pero; pleasant and mutat never varies—lead packages— 25, 40, 5o and Goa.
A POINT AGAINST HIM,
Ile's free even from a breath of mule
pinion, declared elle who la bis best
girl.
l
Oh, I don't know, replied the
friend. He never to* me to the thea
ter yet that stoves did not give him
a breath of suspicion,
Y. P. C. 980,
1911110, 5011111* dR Hobo,
removed
tWesley 31 a
to Wast.} '�gs., Tt0.
mond St. W.,Toronto.
Nu are Throwing Money Away
In Intik g peer ciao,
Ask for and pee that you get
SHIP YOUR PRODUCE,
Butter, Eggs, Apples, Fruit, &c., to
THE DAWSON OOMMIS$IO0 00., Limned,
Cor. of West Market and Colborne Ste., TORONTO.
Have you written upon,
ENTRANCE OR LEAVING
Examinations this year 7
If so egad name, address, sops,1, Weber, and whloh ex
amination, to CENTRAL BUSINESS COLLEGE,
70500E k GERRARD OTS., TORONTO, and rico,,
particulars about free scholarships for n,rooeestul condi
dates. Fall term opens Sept. 6th. Address,
W. H. SHAW, Principal.
Have you written on the
ENTRANCE or RS. LEAVING
Eaomioatlonthleyoar? llaoee,1 na0G address.teonb•
or mad anbooL to ora Pelm nip l of the CENTRAL EUS1-
NE8S COLLEGE, 70500E & GEitRARD 5151, 10-
BONTO, and receive Dull pnrtioulnrs .bunt the Fmo
for the hipethio eoboolinnin vo Sept.oat next. ldato,
for the Fall Sasalon beginning on SSp6 net neat,
Addreoe W. H. SHAW, Principal.
ickcurc”
For Whitlows or Swellings, Cold
Sores,Ulcers, Gum Boils, Toothache,
Dominion Line Steamships,
Montreal and Quebec to Liverpool in summer. Large
and fast twin sow steamships 'Labrador; Van-
coueer,' Dominion' 'Scotsman,' ' Yorkshire;
Superior a000mmodation for First Cabin, &m-
ono Cabin and Steerage passengers. Balm of
passage—Mires Cabin, $52.60; Second Cabin,
504; Steerage 822.50 and stewards according to
steamer and berth. For all information apply
to Local Agents or DAVID To1RAllos & Coe
GaelAgente,17 St. Sacrament tet., Montreal
MAPLE LEAF
ONSOON
1NbJO.0 YLt�N Tete
It to the beat an Roes arches t •
50, 80, 40, 60 ane 600, per puund.
L. COFFEE p_ CO., Ent,rbllxhod lSlS,'
GRAIN AND COMMISSION
MERCHANTS,
Rooms 40412 Board of Trade Building,
TORONTO, ONT.
Timm( Freesia Jens 2. COIFS,
HIRES %r ESS ENGINE
CASTOR MACHINE'
CYLINDER
ENGINE ?ACHING and
THRESHERS' ERS' BELTS.
Get our prices. We want your trade.
WILLIAM C. WILSON & CO
LIMITED,
STEAMBOAT, RAILROAD and MILL SUPPLIES,
24 Front St. Halt, - . TORONTO.
I
The Fidelity Beads of the
Dominifri
r p�
of Dan
�Cf�q,� , ryry
ufr(,Y109. do,
•LeuefLil b,i to and
AooltIoot
9nsurano..r, Cofi pally
are accepted by the Dominion and
Provincial Governments, Mumcipalh
ties, Banks, Railways, Express and
Telegraph Companies, Benefit Scale•
ties, and the professional and. Com,
mercial classes.
HEAD OFFICE, - TORONTO
1. E. ROBERTS, General Manager.
4 Eharedsoatio Gokkf Eng Oat W th
Genuine Garnets amid Pearls
li
You pay nothing, y elm.
Advdroas plainly ilsitle d
and we will send you
1(eckages tit Se nc 1e
aegVetdd o
eloth, a new
discovery w51141c} terqqurpdeoen may
sweet rand fro rants odor, to sell forrCB050 (11'
man) amorist friends et 10e. per packager
;Whoa Bold remit us the Mone and we Will
!send you free Inc your troub a Sao above de.
'earthed ring,which le otampe and warrant.
'earthed motwith genuine Garnets and Pearls&
gond address at once, mention this paper and
"BT.gaiI TgyT ypp wf eq "Sena'
' .mad we
iwiii'eend it. IQs money 3ret rn a rekolred•
!som take all. risk. . Goode returnable. Hand'
!some premiums 10 proportion to amount 0010.
$enelo Agency, 82 McCaul St, Toronto,
TWO SIZES.
FOR ANY POWER.
No.1 has 10.1noh re-
versible burro.
No, 2 has 8 -inch sin.
glo burro.
Both have ball-bear-
ing burr plates
relief springs and
shake food.
Grind One and fast
with least power.
Always guaranteed.
A trial given,
Hundreds MIN.
We make
Patent Boiler
and Bali -Bear-
ing Steel
Whidlvlills
of all kinds—the fin.
est in the market.
Boat material.
Lightest Iunning.
ALLA „.,, LINE
Royal Mail Steamship eo.,
Montreal to Liverpool.
Steamers sail from Montreal every Thnradaf
Morning on arrival of trains from Toronto and
the West about 0 o'clock.
BATES OF PASSAGE:
Cabin 862.50 and upwards ; Beoond Cabin
854 and and $36.26: Steerage to Liverpool
London, Glasgow, Belfast, Londonderry or,
Queenstown $22,50 and 823.50.
A reduotlon of live per cent la allowod on
round trip drat and second oebla tickets.
Railings of steamers or other information ap
to any authorized agent.
00. Bourlier, 1 Ring et. W. Terc00$ .'
or 00. &t A Aran, Montreal.
ITTORIC1
CHI ; ES.
-mrar.Cppll.
OLD AND RE IArEB
L LS
Eetabflehel, 9273
8018 10 FOR TOO—
Clothe year toady Prem bead
to foot with our
OG
MONY MAKER
Prices only f IS, $20 $30.
CCIt.BBIIIIAN BROS., Georgetown, O
FOB T0PC97a111180 8511119 e9.
What
E
ME"
OV'f, r ,SOO emio j it in 0' sa;i]iaidis6>ga
Ilia it WOO flip To•a-ra;eke anlpet ladou018s
Remt yes Dandruff in One Week.
C'ure's g Itchinof the Scalp.
Cures a
t"� lig
Prevents B s kid`9 of Mair..
Stops Falling Out.
POSITIVELY GROWS liAg%
sl;'?1' . 86311311 T1-0Tl61011415 01111' 121
II'Sp ,,d�ryry}�,, qqgg��+' ...�,"-' t-y��`'p�e.�•t�.„,'�'y'- r',t�•'a��f^tnti�74:a.�,,,',
,I;L silo $.. a a:4'u tis% lil..it'SSin,Yi ar 'a0.A3aflLt, xtr— rel
mu) IMP I841110 from Dm -3M% a+r
r'eatilpii et Orton to
A`
i1/4A Cogg Coe, Lomb; eat At' oft,
U,/4;0.